JDM
New Member
Those links are hilarious. Look at any legitimate research on the subject instead of unbacked opinions. There is no physical addiction. It does not exist.
They cited no research. The research does not exist.
They are all sites pushing agendas. The government website's agenda is to pretend that drug laws are not retarded. The psychology website is a blog post with no references. The addiction site is a site promoting the idea of addiction being not your fault so they can sell addiction recovery.
Government website mentions the research.
The Psychology Today website mentions the research done.
Any research you post will have an agenda and it sounds like you have one.
That's a stretch. There have been some (though still small) number of accidents that could be attributable to marijuana (although almost certainly the majority were inexperienced; I haven't smoked in a few months but I am generally more aware with all but extremely high amounts of usage), but there have also been studies that legality substantially decreases the number of alcohol related accidents, so overall it is likely to increase safety to some degree.
As to how this got on pot, couldn't tell you.
I'm not disputing the overall premise. I'm just interested in honestly approaching the facts, and that website is overstating things. There almost certainly have been deaths from marijuana related accidents. A small number to be sure, but not non-existent.
Yep...you guys are right with your bias. The only reason you want it legal is so you can feel better about smoking it. Neither of you wants to look at the truth.
Yep...you guys are right with your bias. The only reason you want it legal is so you can feel better about smoking it. Neither of you wants to look at the truth.
I break laws all the time. I have no moral resistance to doing so, and legalization won't honestly affect me individually in any way. It would however affect the country as a whole positively in several ways. Alcohol related deaths go down, other drug use goes down, and tax revenue goes up.
GK... the truth of the matter is that Colorado and Washington state are the test cases for mass public legalization of pot for recreational use. The only hold back has been a way to police it and more importantly tax its sales and distribution. I wont debate on IF it is addictive or not. Because frankly any thing can be addictive. But the reality is that Pot is no more dangerous than a ton of legally controlled substances currently available in every state of this union. Much like prohibition, the government will eventually decide that its more cost effective to legalize it and make money off of it, rather than continue to bleed money trying to police it as an illegal substance.
And here is the real catch. If it were legalized right this second for public recreational use, no one can force you, me or any one else to use it. Just like no one can force some one to drink beer, or eat twinkies for that matter. Its a personal choice. Just as allowing it to be an addiction to a degree is a personal choice since most types of addiction they are more than willing to help you kick.. for a price.
So even if Davis is addicted to weed, he more than most people has the financial where withal to have corrected this problem. And when it became a problem, it was on HIM and HIM alone to get this problem corrected. It would be one thing if he was addicted and couldnt afford to get help to kick the habit. But considering the fact that he is a multimillionaire, AND his job actually provides help relatively free of charge to HELP him kick this.... in my mind he has no excuse.
1) Alcohol related deaths go down. Perhaps but I'm not sure if that's a good thing. I don't mind when the drinker dies.
2) Other drug use goes down? No evidence to support that claim at al. Many studies have shown that marijuana use has a higher probability to use "harder" drugs.
3) Tax revenue goes up. Perhaps but will it hurt our effectiveness in the workplace?
1) What the fuck is wrong with you? But this also means less innocent people get hit by drunk drivers.
2) No, no they haven't. The gateway argument has been disproven on many occasions and no one with even a hint of credibility uses it. Moreover, legalizing all drugs decreases the abuse of all drugs.
3) Absurd. Laughable.
Learn what you're talking about before making a fool of yourself. This is hilarious.
1) So I'm supposed to feel horrible for people who bring things upon themselves? That makes something wrong with me? How about people not drink and drive.
2) It has never been debunked. The statistics speak for themselves. If you smoke weed, you have a greater chance of trying a harder drug than somebody who does not smoke weed. Legalizing all drugs decreases the abuse of all drugs? How do you figure that?
3) Are you suggesting people that are high, work better than those who are not? It's funny when people make outlandish claims like you do and you can't see your personal bias.
Yep...you guys are right with your bias. The only reason you want it legal is so you can feel better about smoking it. Neither of you wants to look at the truth.
Apparently you don't know how to read. I specifically stated that I had not smoked pot in well over 20 years. "The truth" is that tobacco, alcohol and over-the-counter drugs do much more damage than pot. Do you dispute that? If so - you will be on the wrong end of the argument. Thanks for putting us in our place. Please.